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Explore the concept of development, criteria used to measure it, and the classifications and characteristics of different types of economies. Learn about the challenges and strategies for development in various regions.
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What is development? Which criteria can we use to measure development? Criteria for development: GDP education life expectancy health urbanisation income distribution industrialization literacy infant mortality sector employment
Classifications 1950s: First World: Western Europe, North America, Australia, New Zealand, Japan Second World: Communist countries like the former USSR Rest of the world Third World: Less Developed Countries 1960s/70s: Developed Countries did not include social and political development too simple 1980s: North (developed world) South (less developed world) still too simple oil rich countries? South Korea?
since the 1990s: - Economically More Developed Countries (EMDCs) e.g. Europe, USA high standard of living - Economically Less Developed Countries (ELDCs) lower quality of life - Centrally Planned Economies (CPEs) - Oil Rich Countries (ORCs) e.g. Saudi Arabia, Lybia without oil, many of these countries would be ELDCs - Newly Industrializing Countries (NICs) rapid industrial, social and economic growth in the last few decades
Measuring development most common: GDP per capita in $ but: does not take into account: - wealth and income distribution - local costs of living - health, e.g. life expectancy - education: literacy, schooling - social and environmental standards - regional variations (regional disparities) - informal (unregistered) economy World Bank: Purchasing Power Parity (PPP) instead of GDP in $ level of GDP adjusted to local costs of living
United Nations: Human Development Index includes 3 indices of well-being: - life expectancy - literacy and schooling - GDP(PPP) not included: - access to drinking water - infrastructure - human rights - environmental standards - internet access - arable land - .......
Characteristics of ELDCs (developing countries) - large proportion of the workforce engaged in primary industries (esp. rural sector) - large proportion of the live in rural areas - rapid population growth - low standard of living (low PPP/head) - low life expectancy - high infant mortality rate - low manufacturing production - child labour - high illiteracy rates - bad governance
Development strategies e.g. India 1947 Nehru Ghandi Prime Minister in 1947 aim: self-sufficiency in rural villages in food, clothing and housing large-scale industrial development belief: spinning-wheel! benefits of growth would trickle down to rural areas (e.g. through more demand for agricultural products) this did not happen!
from the 1970s: series of Rural Development Programmes very limited success because of centralized, large-scale planning better approach: de-centralized planning which takes into account the needs, ideas and resources of the local people and environment from the 1990s: liberalization of the economy attraction og FDI (foreign direct investment) successful high growth rates but still: little improvement for the poor
Why do certain regions prosper? Natural advantages: - water, fertile land and other natural resources (oil, ore etc) - location market access (e.g. sea ports) - labour supply Acquired advantages: - infrastructure, also: good suppliers - skilled workforce - state support (subsidies, tax incentives etc.) attraction of more and more investment "growth poles" hope for "spread effects" core area stimulates growth in surrounding areas but: such "growth poles" do not benefit rural areas with low population density
Characteristics of NICs - high growth rates in manufacturing production - increasing proportion of the workforce work in manufacturing industries - improvement in social infrastructure (schools, hospitals etc.) higher life expectancy decreasing illiteracy rate/increasing rate of university students - increasing exports of manufacturing goods - increasing use of technical devices in households (e.g. electrcal appliances, PCs, internet) - increasing productivity, but still low wages/bad working conditions - still low environmental standards Main groups of NICs: - Asian "Tigers" such as Hong Kong, Singapore, South Korea, Taiwan - Latin American NICs such as Brazil and Mexico - China, India
India: an NIC or still an ELDC? ELDC NIC - more imports than exports - growing manufacturing and service sector (agricultural sector declining) - big gaps between rich and poor - very large agricultural sector - migration from rural to urban areas - 60% of the population are illiterate - high growth of GDP per capita - birth rate exceeds death rate - improving standards of education - insufficient/unjust pension system - death rates much lower than birth rates stage II of DTM - use of new technology (e.g. wind turbines) - internet ratio 18/1,000 (increasing)